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Security Beat
Military Technology Considered For U.S. Border Surveillance
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By Stew Magnuson
U.S. Customs and Border Protection is considering applying technologies first developed for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to help solve its lingering problem of monitoring the southwest borderlands.
Raven unmanned aerial vehicles, blimps with cameras that could peer into Mexico and electro-optical cameras are among the items that could be used on the border, said Mark Borkowski, executive director of the SBI program executive office, at a joint hearing of two House Homeland Security subcommittees.
None of this, however, can move forward until a review of the troubled SBInet program is completed. After four years of missed deadlines, failed tests and some $1.3 billion spent on efforts to construct both physical and so-called “virtual fences” in Arizona, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano ordered the review in January.
SBInet was intended to be a series of high-tech cameras and sensors mounted on towers and placed along the border in two Arizona Border Patrol sectors. Live streaming video feeds of illegal border crossers were supposed to be sent directly to agents in the vehicles. That plan was abandoned when CBP could not fund a communications network in the remote areas. The cameras and sensors did not perform as planned and picked up numerous false readings.
A Government Accountability Office report released at the hearing revealed that CBP had continuously lowered the requirements for the system to where it was “deemed acceptable if it identifies less than 50 percent of the items of interest that cross the border.” The number of miles the physical fencing was intended to cover has shrunk from 655 to 387.
Borkowski said deploying the virtual fence along the entire U.S. border probably isn’t feasible. “Already that doesn’t look like a wise thing to do.” A mix of different technologies might be the answer, he said, and those may include items that have had success in Iraq and Afghanistan.
CBP already flies along the southern and northern borders Predator UAVs that first proved their value in Iraq. Napolitano recently announced that the Federal Aviation Administration had approved their expanded use in Texas and the Gulf Coast region.
A new technology mix may include RQ-11 Ravens, which are man-portable, hand-launched 4.5-pound drones used by small units in the Army. They fly up to 1,000 feet and can travel distances of about six miles away from their operators.
“We are seriously considering those,” Borkowski said.
Blimps could be used to not only monitor the border, but also to look into Mexico to see drug smugglers or economic migrants before they reach U.S. territory, one lawmaker suggested.
Since cameras have been SBInet’s main problem, Borkowski was asked if he has considered those currently being used to monitor the lands along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border. Borkowski responded that he has had hundreds of conversations with Defense Department officials and vendors about possible technologies that can be applied to the border issue.
The current cameras being used today are working and have improved, he insisted. They can peer out as far as 10 kilometers if the atmospheric conditions permit, he said.
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